A geological model for describing the spectral emittances of rough-
textured rock and mineral surfaces which accounts for birefringence,
multiple mineral constituents and varying particle diameters is being
developed by Vincent [16] based on earlier theories [17, 18]. In the
case of monomineralic rocks, it theoretically accounts for birefringence
effects, and for rocks composed of several minerals it calculates an
effective complex refractive index. For both cases, the indices are
substituted into equations of a model for particulate media derived
from Mie (single particle scattering) and radiative transfer (multiple
Scattering) theories. The resulting spectral emittances can be used to
determine the effects of textural variations on rock-type discrimination
techniques.
Implicit in the application of both the
geologic models for predictive studies is the ‘act that they can be
calculationally combined with atmospheric radiative transfer models to
provide estimates of atmospheric effects necessary to test the adequacy
aircraft and satellite
sensing under various conditions.
Electromagnetic signals received by airborne or Spacecraft sensors
are affected by the intervening atmosphere between the Earth's surface
and the sensors. The atmosphere scatters and absorbs the radiation from
the surface materials and adds extraneous radiation (path radiance) to
the received signals through scattering and emission by particles in
the atmospheric path. Molecular absorption and emission are the most
important considerations for infrared and microwave radiation. However,
for visible radiation, the principle concern of present multispectral
studies, the light scattering properties of the atmosphere are of
greatest importance. The scattering properties are most affected by the
aerosols that are present. The vertical distributions of these aerosols
can vary substantially from time to time and place to place, and cannot
be measured as easily as those of molecular absorbers such as water vapor
and carbon dioxide which are determinable from radiosonde data. Further-
more, the measurement and calculation of the effects of molecular
absorption on a radiation signal is somewhat simpler than performing
similar work on the effects of atmospheric scattering.
It is through the development and exercise of a radiative transfer
model that one hopes to obtain a bettei understanding of the extent of
atmospheric scattering effects on multispectral sensor signals and to
use that knowledge in developing techniques for overcoming them. Such
models have developed to the point where they can be used in calculations
representing a wide variety of real atmospheric conditions with sufficient
accuracy for remote sensing studies. The intent here is both to calculate
specific corrections to individual data sets to account for atmospheric
scattering and also to use the knowledge gained to develop feature enhancing
preprocessing techniques more powerful in information extraction.
The study of radiative transfer in the atmosphere is not new but, on
the other hand, until recently the scientific community had not produced
a simple, practical and unified computational method for use in modeling
the real atmosphere and its transfer of radiation. Classical radiative
transfer theory was developed many years ago and has undergone quite a
few refinements since then. From a semi-quantitative point of view,